MediaWiki-Vagrant

This page is a translated version of the page MediaWiki-Vagrant and the translation is 1% complete.

MediaWiki-Vagrant is a portable MediaWiki development environment. It consists of a set of configuration scripts for Vagrant and VirtualBox that automate the creation of a virtual machine that runs MediaWiki. Since the configuration is geared towards easy development rather than security, MediaWiki-Vagrant is not recommended for publicly accessible wikis.

Visual overview of Vagrant
Visual overview of Vagrant
MediaWiki Vagrant logo
MediaWiki Vagrant logo
Bryan Davis explains in an interview at Wikimania what MediaWiki Vagrant is
TechTalk on MediaWiki-Vagrant by Bryan Davis and Dan Duvall
Slides from TechTalk on MediaWiki-Vagrant by Bryan Davis and Dan Duvall

The virtual machine that MediaWiki-Vagrant creates makes it easy to learn about, modify, and improve MediaWiki's code: useful debugging information is displayed by default, and various developer tools are set up specifically for inspecting and interacting with MediaWiki code, including a powerful debugger and an interactive interpreter. Best of all, because the configuration is automated and contained in a virtual environment, mistakes are easy to undo.

CPU
64-bit x86 processor
OS
Linux, macOS, or Windows
Memory
At least 4 GiB RAM total on your system, preferably 8 GiB or more, in order to run both the host operating system and the VM. Do not attempt to run on a system with only 2 GiB RAM, it will eventually fail.
Disk
For complex installations, you must have 10–12 GB free on the primary drive (/home partition for Linux, C: drive for Windows). Note in particular that the VM disk images will be stored under your home directory by default.
Network
Active network connection with sufficient bandwidth to download Debian Linux updates and the MediaWiki source code.
Time for setup
20 minutes to 2 hours, depending on conditions and if you have any troubles

Quick start

(If you are installing MediaWiki-Vagrant from the USB distribution, follow the steps in the README rather than the first five steps.)

  1. Get Git
  2. (Linux only) Install NFS if it is not already installed.
    • In Ubuntu, use sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel-server.
    • Fedora usually comes with NFS installed; if not, run sudo dnf install nfs-utils.
  3. Get VirtualBox[1]
  4. Get Vagrant. Note that Vagrant v2.3.7 is the last version licensed under a free license.[2]
  5. Clone code into your current directory (don't clone into a folder in WSL)[3]
    $ git clone --recursive https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/r/mediawiki/vagrant
    
  6. Enter vagrant directory to run vagrant commands in:
    $ cd vagrant
    
  7. Run setup script to setup vagrant before starting the machine:
    Linux/macOS :
    $ ./setup.sh
    
    Windows :
    $ .\setup.bat
    
    When prompted, enter your Gerrit user name (recommended), or just press ↵ Enter.
    If you want to use a release branch instead of the latest version, you can specify it now with vagrant hiera mediawiki::branch REL1_27
  8. Start the virtual machine:
    $ vagrant up
    
    Doing this for the first time might ask for your password as setting up directory sharing via NFS requires sysadmin rights. You can avoid that by setting the appropriate sudo permissions, as described here.
    Pay attention to the console output to make sure that there are no errors. If you bump into errors, the #Troubleshooting startup section may be helpful.
  9. Run the command vagrant open to open your MediaWiki instance. You can login with user Admin and password vagrant.
  10. Enable additional MediaWiki features and extensions.
    To see a list of features (vagrant roles) you can enable, run:
    $ vagrant roles list
    
    To enable a feature, for example the VisualEditor , run:
    $ vagrant roles enable visualeditor
    
    To apply the roles you've enabled to your wiki, run:
    $ vagrant provision
    
vagrant up fails if the default VirtualBox provider is used and the number of virtual CPUs on the host exceeds 32. Use vagrant config vagrant_cores <number of cores> to assign less than 32 of the cores to the VM.
It may take an hour or more before the first vagrant up completes.

Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)

If you are using the WSL Linux-compatible shell on Windows: run commands with vagrant.exe instead of vagrant. Run vagrant.exe config --required instead of ./setup.bat, which does not work in the Linux bash shell.

The account running Vagrant will probably need the "Create Symbolic Links" permission (the easy way to achieve that is running as administrator).

Troubleshooting startup

If your issues are not answered here, IRC is a good option, specifically the #wikimedia-tech connect channel.

  • Sometimes you can fix broken installations (e.g. one saying "No wiki found..." by running vagrant destroy; vagrant up which will rebuild the virtual machine without repeating the most time-consuming parts of the installation process.

Any host

  • You can try installing the versions of VirtualBox and Vagrant that your Linux distribution provides. If you're running recent Debian or Ubuntu, try sudo apt-get install virtualbox vagrant to install the packages for VirtualBox and Vagrant.
  • If you get errors from vagrant up, instead install the most recent versions of VirtualBox and Vagrant.
  • If you run into error message like "Couldn't open file $CLONED_REPOSITORY/trusty-cloud", try the following command:

vagrant up --provider=virtualbox

  • If you got any puppet errors you might need to init puppet submodules, on vagrant directory run git submodule update --init
    • Error: Puppet::Parser::AST::Resource failed with error ArgumentError: Could not find declared class

You might want to compare the output of the initial run of vagrant up in your terminal with this sample. The initial setup may take a long time; if it seems to hang somewhere but there are no errors, just give it a while.

  • If you get warnings that your VirtualBox Guest Additions are the wrong version, you can try installing the vagrant-vbguest plugin which updates them automatically.
  • Vagrant rarely loses pairing with your VM. This thread discusses some ways to work around it (e.g. attaching old VM harddrive to the new profile)
  • Make sure that vagrant/mediawiki repository is up to date:
$ cd vagrant/mediawiki
$ git pull
  • Make sure that you have enabled virtualization in the BIOS. Sometimes this is under the Security settings.
  • Make sure your language encoding settings are UTF-8. If you get "invalid byte sequence in US-ASCII", try (re)setting your LANG and LC_ALL environment variables to something suitable.

For example:

export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
If you have deleted any old VMs you will see an error message like "...path contains non-directory or non-existent components..." and vagrant up will not complete. If you are using NFS (on a non-Windows host operating system), you should be able to fix this by removing /etc/exports: enter sudo rm -i /etc/exports Vagrant will recreate the /etc/exports file the next time you run vagrant up.
MediaWiki-Vagrant will not run on a host that doesn't support VT-X because it specifies a 64bit guest (virtual machine). MediaWiki-Vagrant needs to run on a 64-bit virtual machine, in part because it uses use deb packages from WMF production that are only built for the amd64 architecture.

Windows-specific

  • If you are on Windows and you get "guest machine entered an invalid state" - "poweroff", try downloading a 4.3.15 build of VirtualBox (there is a known problem with 4.3.14 on Windows). If that does not help, make sure you enable Hardware Virtualization Technology (VT-x or AMD-V) in BIOS. Hardware Virtualization is required. It is not an optional performance enhancement. (Some laptops require you to remove the power cable and battery for 30 seconds [1])
  • VirtualBox is incompatible with Microsoft's Hyper-V. If you have Hyper-V enabled – which may be the default if you have installed Visual Studio – you'll get the above errors trying to boot up a VM in VirtualBox. There are three possibilities:
    • In command prompt, run bcdedit /set hypervisorlaunchtype off to turn off Hyper-V and reboot.

To turn Hyper-V back on set it back to auto instead of off

    • Disable Hyper-V through 'Add/Remove Windows Features' in Control Panel and reboot.

This will get VirtualBox working, but will prevent you from using any Hyper-V VMs you may have, such as Windows Phone emulators.

This may be unstable.

Mac-specific

  • NFS errors To avoid NFS errors, while installing, ensure the firewall will accept connections: Apple > System Preferences > Security & Privacy > Firewall > Firewall Options.

You will need to UNcheck "Block all incoming connections" and probably also UNcheck "Enable stealth mode" in order to accept the following: netbiosd, nfsd, rpc.lockd, rpc.rquotad, rpcbind, VBoxHeadless. Note, you may need to restart your computer and change the status to "Allow incoming connections" during a couple vagrant ups. After installation, you may be able to re-check "Block all incoming connections and "Enable stealth mode" now that the firewall rules have been updated.

    • Alternatively you can turn off NFS shares via vagrant config nfs_shares off

Debian and Ubuntu

  • MediaWiki-Vagrant uses NFS to share some folders with the host machine (your computer).

You need to set up your computer as an "NFS server", see e.g., Ubuntu instructions. On Debian, sudo apt-get install nfs-kernel-server will work; you may need to modprobe nfsv3 as well. Note that Debian's NFS server will not start without an entry in /etc/exports. If sudo rpcinfo -p doesn't show "nfs" services running, this is likely what's going on. Adding your home directory as the last line in /etc/exports and then /etc/init.d/nfs-kernel-server restart will usually be good enough to get you past this chicken-and-egg problem.

  • The NFS shares used by MediaWiki-Vagrant cannot be run from an encrypted directory, as may be the case if you are running on Ubuntu and using an encrypted home directory. To run MediaWiki-Vagrant, you can either:
    • Move the MediaWiki-Vagrant directory to an unencrypted volume (e.g., /opt) before running vagrant up
    • Alternatively, you can turn off NFS shares via vagrant config nfs_shares off
  • NFS setup seems to get stuck sometimes (initial vagrant up hangs at "Mounting NFS shared folders").

Restarting the NFS daemon on the host helps. (See #5802.)

  • If you are getting port forwarding errors saying the ports are in use, you may need to open up VirtualBox, entirely remove the virtual machine, and try again.
  • vagrant up may tell you that "The executable 'bsdtar' Vagrant is trying to run was not found in the PATH variable." You can fix this on Ubuntu with sudo apt install libarchive-tools.
  • On Ubuntu with Secure Boot enabled, you will have a difficult time installing VirtualBox. Your machine may give you guff when you run /sbin/vboxconfig. If it does, you can rectify the situation by signing the associated kernel module. Step-by-step instructions can be found in this askubuntu post.

Fedora

  • If you get Network 10.11.12.13 is not available. after running vagrant up, disable SELinux via sudo setenforce 0 or fix your SELinux setup.
  • If you get The provider for this Vagrant-managed machine is reporting that it is not yet ready for SSH. after running vagrant roles enable mediawiki --provision, make sure to explicitly set the provider, for example via vagrant destroy followed by vagrant up --provider=virtualbox
  • If you get mount.nfs: mount to NFS server '10.11.12.13:download-directory/vagrant' failed: RPC Error: Unable to receive, run vagrant config nfs_shares

Basic usage

Screenshot

The vagrant command-line tool on the host machine provides several subcommands for controlling your virtual machine. You've already used one: vagrant up, which turns on the virtual machine. Like most vagrant subcommands, you need to run it from the MediaWiki-Vagrant directory or one of its children. When you first run it, Vagrant will fetch a system image and set up requisite software for running MediaWiki. This can take 1–2 hours of CPU and wall clock time on a broadband connection, but it only needs to happen once. When you run vagrant up in the future, it will simply boot up the machine.

vagrant ssh starts an interactive login shell on the virtual machine. It'll log you in as the user vagrant; root access is available to via sudo, which is passwordless. Because the virtual machine is entirely sandboxed within your computer, it is configured for convenience, not security. As a rule, whenever you encounter a password prompt, the password is vagrant.

When you log in, you should see a colorful MediaWiki banner and a few reminders of useful commands.

The command phpsh will start an interactive PHP interpreter with MediaWiki's codebase already loaded. You can type in some code, hit 'enter', and the code will be evaluated immediately. If you start a line with '=', its computed value will be pretty-printed. Type ? for quick help or help start for additional instructions.

The /vagrant folder corresponds to the MediaWiki-Vagrant folder on your host machine, and its contents is shared. MediaWiki's code is installed in /vagrant/mediawiki. This allows you to use your normal editor environment on your host machine to edit the MediaWiki code that runs on your virtual machine.

Updating

Use vagrant git-update to keep your git repositories, external libraries, and database schema up to date. This command is equivalent to running

  1. git pull in core and all extension and skin directories
  1. composer update to ensure that the latest Composer-managed libraries are available
  1. finally the update.php script.

You should also occasionally (or when needed for a new feature) update MediaWiki-Vagrant itself, which vagrant git-update does not include. Run:

git pull

… in your MediaWiki-Vagrant root directory. This will take effect when you run:

vagrant provision

You can run that command immediately after you run git pull, or sometime after.

Uwaga Uwaga: If you update from git manually you may also need to run composer update to download external libraries required by MediaWiki. You can run the checkComposerLockUpToDate.php script to see if composer update is needed.
Some projects have NPM dependencies, often for development usage only, that are not installed by Composer. These may be approximately identified with find -not \( -name node_modules -prune \) -name package.json and manually installed as needed after an update by executing npm install in each directory wanted.

Log out of your virtual machine by typing logout or by pressing Ctrl+D. Now that you're back in a standard command prompt, you can run vagrant halt to shut down the virtual machine and vagrant up to bring it back up. vagrant destroy will delete the virtual machine's files; this command is useful if you want to return your instance to a pristine state. (You'll need to follow up with vagrant up to provision a fresh instance.)

Using roles

MediaWiki-Vagrant sets up a basic MediaWiki instance by default, but it also knows how to configure a range of complementary software, including some popular MediaWiki extensions and their dependencies. These optional software stacks are collectively known as 'roles', and MediaWiki-Vagrant offers an easy and powerful command-line interface for managing them.

$ vagrant roles list # Display a list of available roles. $ vagrant roles enable rola # Turn on role for this machine. $ vagrant roles disable rola # Turn off role for this machine. $ vagrant provision # After you are done enabling and/or disabling roles, run this to make the change take effect.

Watch a short screencast demonstrating how to use roles. Roles has more information about some roles.

If you add many roles, you may need to increase memory available to the Vagrant VM. In particular, setting up the "browsertests" role involves compiling the ffi ruby Gem which is a memory-hungry task; if it fails try freeing some memory in the VM or increasing its memory allocation (bug 53864).

See the section Authoring roles below if you're interested in adding roles to MediaWiki-Vagrant.

Troubleshooting specific roles

centralauth

There are some roles that require special attention, centralauth role does not run db migrations automatically via puppet and requires running those by hand. If you get errors on provisioning this role try to run this script on the extension and see the errors it outputs:

mwscript extensions/CentralAuth/maintenance/migrateAccount.php --username 'Admin' --auto

Once you get a more concrete error you probably need to know what migration you need to run from the ones here:

extensions/CentralAuth/db_patches

wikidata

A simple vagrant roles enable wikidata && vagrant provision would fail. Here is a complete set of commands to make the Wikidata role up and running.

$ vagrant up
$ vagrant git-update
$ vagrant ssh
$ sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
$ composer selfupdate --update-keys
$ composer config --global process-timeout 9600
$ exit
$ vagrant roles enable wikidata
$ vagrant provision

Note that the first provision may complain, thus looking like a failure. However, if you run a second provision, you will see that everything goes fine.

How to import a Wikidata dump

The Vagrant command import-dump, which imports an XML file into MediaWiki, does not handle wikis other than the default one (see phab:T183274#3893785). You need to run the importDump.php script inside the Vagrant box.

Here is the procedure to import XML dumps.

$ mkdir wikidata_dumps
$ cd wikidata_dumps
  • download the pages-articles chunks. For instance:
$ wget https://dumps.wikimedia.org/wikidatawiki/latest/wikidatawiki-latest-pages-articles10.xml-p5264684p6341661.bz2
  • enable the import of Wikibase entities (see phab:T72898#1588002). Append the following line to your LocalSettings.php:
$wgWBRepoSettings[ 'allowEntityImport' ] = true;
  • the following BASH script can help you monitor the process. You can paste it in a import_wikidata.sh file. Note that the highlighted line calls the actual import script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash

chunks=$(find wikidata_dumps -type f)
for chunk in $chunks
do
    now=$(date)
    echo "$now: started import of $chunk" >> wd_import.log
    echo "-------------------------------------------" >> wd_import.log
    bzcat $chunk | mwscript importDump.php --wiki=wikidatawiki --uploads --debug --report 10000 2>>wd_import.log
    now=$(date)
    echo "-------------------------------------------" >> wd_import.log
    echo "$now: completed import of $chunk" >> wd_import.log
    echo "===========================================" >> wd_import.log
done
  • log into the Vagrant box and run the script. Debug messages should show up there:
$ vagrant ssh
$ cd /vagrant
$ sudo chmod +x import_wikidata.sh
$ ./import_wikidata.sh
  • you can follow the progress log from outside the Vagrant box:
$ tail -f wd_import.log

Additional suggestions

Speeding up MediaWiki on Windows

MediaWiki out-of-the-box will likely run slow (page loads take 5+ seconds). This is because the virtual machine uses a shared file system that retrieves the files very slowly. Enabling NFS on Windows by installing the Vagrant WinNFSd plugin with vagrant plugin install vagrant-winnfsd, enabling NFS shares with vagrant config nfs_shares true, and restarting the machine with vagrant reload should significantly speed up page load times. You should make sure that the plugin is installed every time you run the machine as well.[4] You can further speed it up by enabling nfs_cache, however, be warned that your wiki may run into weird errors because some files may not be updated completely when using the cache.

You can also speed up Mediawiki by using smb_shares. Make sure not to enable it at the same time as nfs_shares. Enable it with vagrant config smb_shares yes and run vagrant reload in an shell run as an administrator. If you don't run it as an administrator, you will be warned with an error when vagrant goes up and when you go to the wiki address, you will see a Wiki not found. When prompted, type in the username of your account (the name of your home user directory) and password (your Microsoft account password if your account is not a local account with a normal password).

Local MediaWiki core copy

Sometimes you may want to start over from scratch by removing the entire vagrant directory or cleaning out the vagrant/mediawiki directory. In order to speed up the vagrant provisioning process, you may want to consider keeping a local, updated clone of the MediaWiki core that you copy into vagrant/mediawiki.

for example, assuming you are cloning MediaWiki repos into ~/projects/mediawiki/:

# clone and store a clean copy of MediaWiki core in ~/projects/mediawiki/core
cd ~/projects/mediawiki/
git clone ssh://<your-gerrit-username>@gerrit.wikimedia.org:29418/mediawiki/core

# clone a clean copy of vagrant in ~/projects/mediawiki/vagrant
cd ~/projects/mediawiki
git clone ssh://<your-gerrit-username>@gerrit.wikimedia.org:29418/mediawiki/vagrant

# create the mediawiki subdirectory if it doesn't exist
cd ~/projects/mediawiki/vagrant
mkdir ~/projects/mediawiki/vagrant/mediawiki

# copy the clean MediaWiki core to the clean vagrant/mediawiki directory
cp -r ~/projects/mediawiki/core/ ~/projects/mediawiki/vagrant/mediawiki

Update cloned repos

Update the cloned repos as often as possible/necessary.

cd ~/projects/mediawiki/core
git pull

cd ~/projects/mediawiki/vagrant
git pull
git submodule update --init --recursive

Or to update all cloned repos:

vagrant git-update

Vagrant reload

If you change configuration (e.g. vagrant_ram, your VM/MediaWiki website freezes, or you experience a problem, vagrant reload may resolve it. This will restart your guest. Some roles also require reloading, which should happen automatically.

When to enable roles

Enable roles only once you've successfully run your first vagrant up.

Note that vagrant destroy will not reset the enabled roles. Be sure to disable all roles after running vagrant destroy, then run vagrant up. Then you can re-enable any roles and run vagrant provision.

Vagrant behind proxy

If you are behind a proxy, Vagrant might throw some errors. You can install vagrant-proxyconf. It’s a plugin that allows your virtual machine to use specified proxies. This is a quick set up guide. For a detailed documentation you may check here.

Install the plugin:

vagrant plugin install vagrant-proxyconf

To configure proxy settings for all pieces of software on all vagrant VMs, add the following lines to your $VAGRANT_HOME/Vagrantfile (default ~/.vagrant.d/Vagrantfile).

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  if Vagrant.has_plugin?("vagrant-proxyconf")
    config.proxy.http     = "http://192.168.0.2:3128/"
    config.proxy.https    = "http://192.168.0.2:3128/"
    config.proxy.no_proxy = "localhost,127.0.0.1,.example.com"
  end
  # ... other stuff
end

Replace the addresses with the IP and port number of your proxy server. Use the config.proxy.no_proxy option to list out all the sites/domains for which you might want to bypass proxy. For example,

config.proxy.no_proxy = "localhost,127.0.0.1,.example.com,.someinternaldomain.com"

Now when you run a vagrant up, there shouldn’t be any warnings.

To disable the plugin, set config.proxy.enabled to false or empty string (""). You can also disable it for specific applications. For example,

config.proxy.enabled         # → all applications enabled(default)
config.proxy.enabled = true  # → all applications enabled
config.proxy.enabled = { svn: false, docker: false }
                             # → specific applications disabled
config.proxy.enabled = ""    # → all applications disabled
config.proxy.enabled = false # → all applications disabled

MediaWiki-Vagrant prep

You may want to consider using a shell script such as mw-vagrant-prep to prepare a directory for a MediaWiki-Vagrant install.

Debugging

Vagrant

You can debug MediaWiki-Vagrant itself (e.g. the errors that happen during vagrant up) with VAGRANT_LOG:

VAGRANT_LOG=debug vagrant up

Provisioning

You can debug the provisioning process by running

PUPPET_DEBUG=1 vagrant provision

PHP

You can debug PHP with Xdebug. Debugging in PHP is different from other client-side debugging. Your IDE listens for incoming connections, and when you access the server with a browser, a special header instructs PHP to connect to your IDE. For lack of better documentation, see the (old and overly verbose) MediaWiki-Vagrant/Advanced usage#MediaWiki debugging using Xdebug and an IDE in your host for further information.

Chrome

Configure clear cache to automatically reload after clearing, and set up keyboard shortcuts (e.g. Ctrl+R for clear&reload, Ctrl+⇧ Shift+D to switch XDebugger on/off)

Firefox

  • Install and configure an xdebug-compatible IDE on your machine (Eclipse, PhpStorm, Emacs, etc.)
  • In IDE, start listening for the incoming debug connection
  • In IDE, set break point at the spot that interests you
  • Enable XDebug in the browser and navigate to your vagrant installation ( http://127.0.0.1:8080/... )

CLI

For maintenance scripts and other code executed from CLI, you can use the xdebug_on and xdebug_off shell commands to enable/disable debugging.

Log files

The MediaWiki logs can be found in /vagrant/logs. There are log files for Apache in /var/log/apache2/, but it seems they are not written to. The MySQL query log can be obtained by issuing SET GLOBAL general_log = 'ON'; in a client and then looking at /var/lib/mysql/*.log.

Running and debugging unit tests

To run the PHPUnit tests for ALL extensions:

$ vagrant ssh
$ sudo -u www-data env PHPUNIT_WIKI=wiki PHPUNIT_LOGS=0 composer --working-dir=/vagrant/mediawiki phpunit

To run unit tests for a single extension:

$ sudo -u www-data env PHPUNIT_WIKI=wiki PHPUNIT_LOGS=0 composer --working-dir=/vagrant/mediawiki composer phpunit /vagrant/mediawiki/extensions/ExtensionName/tests/phpunit/

Some tests may require running as the proper user to create lock files and such, hence this command runs as the "user" www-data that handles web requests.

For building coverage reports, see Manual:PHP unit testing/Code coverage#MediaWiki-Vagrant.

Debugging phpunit tests is a little more complex. This method is a bit hacky, but can be used until debugging remote interpreter improves (e.g. in phpStorm 8 EAP). This workaround lets you run MediaWiki unit tests from the browser.

  • Download phpunit.phar file to the root of your vagrant directory.
  • Create a php file unittest.php in the root of the mediawiki directory.

Do not commit this file to the repository. Paste the following code into it:

unittest.php 
<html><body><pre>
<?php
error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', 1);
require_once 'includes/WebStart.php';
$_SERVER[ 'argv' ] = array(
	'--configuration', '/vagrant/mediawiki/tests/phpunit/suite.xml',
	'/vagrant/mediawiki/extensions/JsonConfig/tests/phpunit/JCObjContentTest.php',
);
require_once '/vagrant/mediawiki/tests/TestsAutoLoader.php';
require_once '/vagrant/phpunit.phar';
PHPUnit_TextUI_Command::main(false);


  • In the above file, change argv parameter to the name of your test file
  • Apache maps the root of the MediaWiki directory to /w.

So navigate to http://127.0.0.1:8080/w/unittest.php to run this file

  • Follow #Debugging instructions to attach your debugger

Running browser tests

For JavaScript unit tests (QUnit), see Manual:JavaScript unit testing .

Pushing commits

If you're using MediaWiki-Vagrant for development you'll probably want to push some commits to MediaWiki core or an extension's repository using git review. By default, all remotes point to the https:// URLs. To avoid overriding this on a case by case basis, run:

$ git config --global url."ssh://<username>@gerrit.wikimedia.org:29418/".insteadOf "https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/r/"

You also need to have your ssh keys in ~/.ssh.

Gerrit

To submit changes, use cd to navigate to your extensions folder. Then follow the instructions on submitting a patch via gerrit.

Troubleshooting

Check PHP version and settings
http://127.0.0.1:8080/info.php
Edit LocalSettings.php?
First, check that there is no role (vagrant list-roles) that already does what you need.

If not, create a file in settings.d/ directory. See README and 00-debug.php-example file.

Update MediaWiki code?
The easiest is to use vagrant git-update from the host.

Or, to just update the code without dependencies, you can use regular git fetch, pull, etc. commands in vagrant/mediawiki and vagrant/mediawiki/extensions/SomeExtension directories. You can run these commands on the virtual machine, but the file access will be faster on the host machine. MediaWiki-Vagrant pulls code from git master when you initially set up and/or add a role, but doesn't automatically update code after that.

Run MediaWiki PHP interpreter
ssh to vagrant and run mwscript eval.php.

You might need to run it with sudo

Run MediaWiki SQL interpreter
ssh to vagrant and run mwscript sql.php.

You might need to run it with sudo

Update virtual machine software packages?
vagrant provision does not update system packages in the VM.

When you connect with vagrant ssh the login message will inform that you:
NN packages can be updated.
NN updates are security updates.

In vagrant ssh:

  • to update all packages, enter sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
  • for "automatic installation of security (and other) upgrades", similar to Cloud VPS instances, enter sudo unattended-upgrade
  • to update to the same packages that are on production WMF servers... TODO
Customize Vagrant
You should never need to change Vagrantfile directly.

There are several aspects of vagrant you can customize:

  • Core settings (git user, ports, ram, ip, port forwarding) can be customized via .settings.yaml file.

See vagrant config --help and vagrant forward-port --help for instructions. So for example you may run vagrant forward-port 1234 80 to enable port forwarding from host:1234 to guest:80.

  • Perform additional steps after Vagrantfile load by creating a file called Vagrantfile-extra.rb and placing it in the same folder as Vagrantfile - it will be automatically loaded.

In case of conflict, values in the 'extra' file will supersede values in this file. See example in support/ directory.

Add custom Puppet code?
This is ideal if you want to work on your own MediaWiki site locally and let the MediaWiki-Vagrant install your dependencies for you.

It's ideal if you have your own fork. There is a distinction between a role and this use case. Roles are meant to be installed in any order and without breaking. If your fork needs different calls and get in trouble with roles, create your own class and call what you need, including roles.

To do so, place your custom puppet code in puppet/modules/local/manifests/myown.pp with your own class, like so:
class local::myown {
    include ::role::svg
}

To apply your class, add it to the "classes" key in puppet/hieradata/local.yaml. You can create the file if it doesn't exist.

classes:
  - local::myown

Then run vagrant provision to apply the change via Puppet.

Update MediaWiki-Vagrant itself?
(For example, to use new roles.) In a terminal, change to the vagrant directory on the host computer and enter a regular git command such as git pull --ff-only.

You will typically want to run vagrant provision after updating to apply any new puppet changes to your virtual machine.

Run GUI applications on the virtual machine?
If you have an X server installed, SSH into the virtual machine using ssh -- -X to enable X forwarding.

(Mac users should update to the latest version of XQuartz.)

As an alternative, you can run the virtual machine in GUI mode, which allows you to interact with the VM as though it had a physical display.

To enable GUI mode, create a file called Vagrantfile-extra.rb in the root repository folder, with this as its content:

Vagrant.configure('2') do |config|
    config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
        vb.gui = true
    end
end
Save the file and run vagrant halt followed by vagrant up.

The virtual machine's display will appear in a window on your desktop.

Adjust the resources allocated to the VM?
If you'd like to allocate more or less CPU / RAM to the VM, see vagrant config --help for instructions.

Alternatively, you can do it by creating Vagrantfile-extra.rb (see support/ dir for an example):

Vagrant.configure('2') do |config|
    config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |vb|
        # See http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/ch08.html for additional options.
        vb.customize ['modifyvm', :id, '--memory', '768']
        vb.customize ['modifyvm', :id, '--cpus', '2']
    end
end
Change the editor used for git commit messages?
git config --global core.editor "vim"
Setup a custom hostname?
Go to Horizon, choose Web Proxies, and enter a DNS hostname, say <hostname>

View your new wiki at "http://<hostname>/wiki/"

Make the custom hostname point to homepage of my vagrant role instead of wiki homepage?
Create a local.yaml file in the /vagrant/puppet/hieradata directory. In it, add:
<rolename>::vhost_name:<hostname>
role::mediawiki::hostname: localhost

Run vagrant provision.

Run a branch of MediaWiki other than master?
Set the mediawiki::branch key in puppet/hieradata/local.yaml.

You can create the file if it doesn't exist.

mediawiki::branch: "wmf/1.24/wmf18"
This change has to be made BEFORE running vagrant up for the first time. If you decide you want to do it later, make the change, destroy your current VM with vagrant destroy -f, delete your existing mediawiki checkout and finally build a new VM with vagrant up.
Vagrant is designed to run with the master branch, and may not work perfectly, or at all with older versions of core and/or extensions[5].
For the MediaWiki 1.35 release branch, it requires some modification to adjust PHP version requirements that are currently not met. See Topic:W05qhsn58ztktod8 for instructions.

Advanced usage

MediaWiki settings

As an alternative to managing all MediaWiki settings in a single, large LocalSettings.php file, consider grouping your configurations by component or theme, and creating a separate PHP file in settings.d/ for each group. This makes it quite easy to keep your settings organized, to temporarily disable specific configurations, and to share settings with others.

MediaWiki will automatically load any PHP files in settings.d/ in lexical order. You can control the order in which your configurations are set by adopting the habit of adding a two-digit prefix to each file name.

For example:

    settings.d/
    ├── 10-RunFirst.php
    ├── 20-SomeExtension.php
    └── 99-RunLast.php

Note that the settings files in settings.d/puppet-managed are automatically created and destroyed in response to your Puppet configuration. Don't put your custom settings there, because Puppet will erase or override them. Keep your custom settings files in settings.d/ instead.

Vagrant flags

vagrant config --list display a list of all current Vagrant flags.

After the initial ./setup.sh, in your vagrant directory, you can then set one of the vagrant flags that appears in the config list, e.g. vagrant config nfs_shares no

Job queue

If you're testing something that needs to churn the job queue, you may need to increase the number of job runners. Currently this is not available through LocalSettings.php, but must be set in the config file for the job runner.

  1. Open puppet/modules/mediawiki/templates/jobrunner.json.erb
  1. Change the value for the runners key from 1 to the desired value (say, 4)
  1. Re-provision with vagrant --provision
  1. Beware this will be a difference from the git master in your code

See instructions above for adjusting CPU core count appropriately (highly recommended for CPU-bound task such as video transcoding).

Additional storage space

By default, there is relatively little free space on the root partition within the VM. If you plan to test uploading and processing of large image and video files, this may be insufficient.

Manual steps:

  • Shut down the VM (vagrant halt)
  • Open VirtualBox Manager
  • Select the VM and go into Settings
    • Under Storage, select "Controller: SATA" and click the "Add hard disk" icon.
    • Select the default disk image type.
    • Name the disk 'VagrantImageSpace' or similar, and give it enough space (say, 80GB) -- by default the file will start small and expand to actual usage, so give as much space as you might need
    • Close out the dialogs and restart the VM (vagrant up)
  • Run vagrant ssh to get a shell inside the terminal
    • Run sudo fdisk /dev/sdb to set up new partitions...
    • Type n, p, 1, and hit (enter) twice for default size
    • Type w to save the partition table
  • Run sudo mke2fs /dev/sdb1 to create the filesystem
  • Run sudo vi /etc/fstab to edit the mounts list
    • Add line at end: /dev/sdb1 /srv/images ext4 errors=remount-ro 0 2
    • save out
  • Run sudo mount /srv/images to mount the filesystem
  • Run sudo chown www-data:www-data /srv/images to set the file permissions
  • Exit the shell exit
  • Reboot the VM (vagrant halt; vagrant up)

Authoring roles

The virtual machine created by MediaWiki-Vagrant resembles Wikimedia's production environment in key respects, and it uses the same tool—Puppet—that Wikimedia's technical operations team uses to manage production servers and Wikimedia Cloud VPS instances. Puppet is a configuration management tool that provides a domain-specific language for expressing software configurations in a declarative fashion. Files containing Puppet code are called 'manifests'. When Puppet runs, it interprets the manifests you feed it and configures the machine accordingly. A Vagrant role is a set of Puppet manifests.

MediaWiki-Vagrant's Puppet codebase contains abstractions that make it easy to automate the configuration of MediaWiki extensions and related software. If you are a developer working on a software project that relates to MediaWiki, you are encouraged to submit a patch with a Puppet role for your project. Adding a Vagrant role for your project makes it easy for other developers to check out your work. Using a managed virtual machine as a development sandbox for your project reduces the chance of "works-on-my-machine" errors that often result from geographically remote developers working in incompatible environments.

The easiest way to get started with custom roles is to look at how existing roles are implemented in puppet/modules/role/manifests/*.pp. These roles depend on Puppet modules in puppet/modules (usually, foo::bar { ... } translates to a call to puppet/modules/foo/manifests/bar.pp) and use files and templates from the other puppet/modules/role/*/rolename/ directories. The Puppet code is generally well-documented and contains examples that demonstrate its proper usage.

Some of the more useful puppet modules are:

Setting up an instance on Cloud VPS

You can use MediaWiki-Vagrant in Cloud VPS to install MediaWiki on a Wikimedia Cloud VPS instance and enable MediaWiki-Vagrant roles in it.

Bugs

If you spot a bug in MediaWiki-Vagrant, please report it. First, make sure the bug is not a known Vagrant or VirtualBox bug by searching the Vagrant issue tracker on GitHub and the VirtualBox bugtracker. If it is not, go ahead and submit a bug report to Wikimedia Phabricator. Clearly describe the issue and include steps to reproduce, whenever possible.

Notes

  1. If you are on Fedora, do not follow Oracle's instructions. Instead, enable the RPMfusion repositories (e.g. via Apper's configuration), then run sudo dnf install VirtualBox VirtualBox-kmodsrc akmod-VirtualBox kmod-VirtualBox (Note: Case-sensitive, and sometimes version-sensitive! If you don't find the package, search in Discover instead.) Alternatively you can follow this guide. You may get an error about your kernel being too recent. If you do, install akmods-VirtualBox, and run sudo akmods to make sure the module builds.
  2. On Fedora, you can run sudo dnf install vagrant.
  3. https://github.com/hashicorp/vagrant/issues/10576#issuecomment-452793401
  4. https://peshmerge.io/how-to-speed-up-vagrant-on-windows-10-using-nfs/
  5. Vagrant dependent on MediaWiki 1.21+